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Week 5 pick 'em results

Another atrocious week for me as I wrap up the worst two-week picking stretch of my life.

WEEK 6 RESULTS

7

charlamange8
diverdo
tacklethemanwiththefootball

6

MNAlum
Wavetime
roll wave
winwave
DrBox

5

p8kpev
LSU Law Greenie
chigoyboy

4

paliii
Gretna Green

2

Guerry


OVERALL STANDINGS

33

winwave

31

Wavetime
charlamange8

30

tacklethemanwiththefootball

27

Gretna Green

26

MNAlum
diverdo

25

roll wave

23

Guerry
DrBox
chigoyboy
LSU Law Greenie (missed 1 week)

22

WaveON (missed 1 week)

21

paliii
p8kpev


GAME-BY-GAME RESULTS

Tulane over South Florida 13 of 14
Alabama over Georgia 6
Notre Dame over Louisville 6
Illinois over Penn State 10
Kansas State over Oklahoma State 8
LSU over South Alabama 6
BYU over Baylor 10
Boise State over Washington State 4

Gabriel Lovorn

We just got a football commitment from Gabriel Lovorn from Tennessee. He’s got a 5.4 rating from Rivals (2 star) and a 3 star from ESPN with nothing from 247 or ON3. That’s not very impressive. He apparently has or did have an offer from Ole Miss but from no one else in the P4. Some have him listed as a TE and others as an LB, but after watching his highlight on HUDL, I think he can play anywhere he wants; and we should let him. In the highlights, link below, he mostly plays running back, though a few plays feature him at WR and a few others at LB. He’s listed at 6’4” and 225# and looks every bit of it. The highlights show him as fast, elusive, and almost impossible to bring down. I’m not sure of the competition but he’s a man among boys in the tape. At least to me, he looks like a kid who can play. Could be a real steal.

Roll Wave!!!

Junior Season - Gabriel Lovorn highlights - Hudl

Update: Thursday, Oct. 3

Jon Sumrall did not have much time to talk as he rushed off to some event after Thursday morning's practice, but he confirmed Jacob Barnes would be available Saturday after missing the two previous games with a groin injury he aggravated against Oklahoma. Note he said "available," not that he definitely would take over from Ethan Head. I'm guessing it will come down to a Saturday decision on who would be more effective.

In other injury news, Adin Huntington still is not 100 percent and may not play against UAB. That's why Tulane experimented with Gerrod Henderson at end and Kam Hamilton at tackle during Wednesday's practice. As I wrote yesterday, they still are searching for their best combination on a deep defensive front that did not gotten consistent production until the South Florida game. Huntington played a few downs at bandit in his limited action against the Bulls because they have not found anyone who can get to the quarterback at that spot. My best bet is they will stick with the starting four they used against South Florida, with Hamilton at end, Parker Peterson at the nose, Patrick Jenkins at tackle and Matthew Fobbs-White at end, but they won't hesitate to shift Hamilton inside and go with Henderson at end.

Sumrall also gave a promising update on Shazz Preston, who has not played or practiced since aggravating a hamstring injury in a conditioning drill before preseason practice started. Preston does not like he is walking without a hitch to me, but Sumrall said he was on schedule to return after the open date and play against Rice on Oct. 19. I'm skeptical about that, but Sumrall has been a straight shooter about injuries all year, so that definitely is the plan.

"He had an appointment yesterday," Sumrall said. "He should be able to run some next week and I think he's going to be available after the bye."

Thursdays are light workouts with no helmets on--what Sumrall calls a walkthrough. The most notable thing to me today was the bucket hat Yulkeith Brown wore during practice. It clearly made him stand out.

I am doing a feature on Tyler Grubbs and Josh Remetich to run in Saturday's paper, so I asked Sumrall about their similarities.

"Man, they are both passionate, they are both true New Orleanians, guys that take pride in what they are doing, they care, they give great effort, they hold others accountable, they don't have a problem stepping up being vocal, they play to the echo of the whistle, they strain. I love being around them. I love having them on this team. They are what you want."

I talked to Remetich yesterday. Here's the interview:

REMETICH

On what he remembers about PAC ball:

"I remember me and him first met playing baseball, and then we actually went to middle school together in the fifth grade. Me and him didn't really get along. It was pretty funny. Me and him were always going back and forth, especially at recess. We started some fights, but it was fun."

On who won the fights:

"It went back and forth. I wasn't as big back then. Kind of like getting into high school I started getting a growth spurt."

On when got closer:

"Probably around seventh grade year. In fifth and sixth we'd go back and forth, and then in seventh grade when we started playing football together, we were in seventh grade playing eighth grade football, and then when we started eighth grade we started playing J.V., so it was fun getting closer with him instead of fighting."

On personalities:

"I'd say pretty similar. On the field we're aggressive, but off the field we're kind and nice. We have two different personalities on the field and off the field."

On dynamics when Tulane recruited Remetich but not Grubbs:


"I tried telling them this guy's a hell of a player, he can run sideline to sideline and he's big. He's not a light guy, but he always gives high effort. We always talked about him here at Tulane, and I always put in a good word for him."

On mosquitos at Pac ball:

"Oh my gosh. We were out in the woods. It was bad."

On how close they lived to each other growing up:

"Yeah, we actually used a carpool together going into high school, and then we probably lived five minutes, 10 minutes away from each other. We were always together, always hanging out."

On Grubbs transferring to Tulane from La Tech:

"I first heard he hit the portal, and then JJ (McCleskey) came up to me and said we need to get him here. I was like, all right, get him on an official and I'll hang out with him, so I was actually his host on the official visit. His uncle that he's really close with and I'm really close with came here with us and was up there taking pictures. It was really exciting times. I was like, dude, it doesn't get much better than this. You're playing big-time ball in front of your family and everything like that. He's close with his grandparents and his uncle, so it was a dumb decision if he didn't come here to be honest with you."

On entering fifth year:

It's just really exciting. Seeing everything from 2-10 to 12-2 Cotton Bowl. Seeing what it takes to be 12-2 and what happens when you're kind of messing around and you're 2-10. Seeing the team grow from spring to fall camp, the talent that coach Sumrall was able to bring in from spring to fall camp was really special. I said this a long time ago. I think we have more talent everywhere on the field than the Cotton Bowl team. Absolutely."

On needing time to jell:

"We're finally starting to come together and playing together. The first couple of games it's hard to get a feel for how someone plays--different coverages, different how the wide receiver breaks and everything like that, and once you all start playing together, you saw this past game we were lighting up the scoreboard and stopping them on defense."

On being banged up last week:

"I had to take a little time, but I"m good."

On pulling guard:

"That's one of my strengths is being able to get out there in space. One thing that coach Roushar always says is don't break down whenever you're out there in space, just run through them. They are far more athletic than you."

On O-line play:

"There are still a couple of things we need to improve. We've got to get rid of the TFLs and the negative plays, but it was a couple of little missed assignments that we're going to clean up for this week and then we'll be good."

On what team needs to do:

"We need to come out with the same mentality that we come out with every week. If you control the line of scrimmage and control the box, you can have fun playing the game."

On all O-line coaches he has had at Tulane:

"All right. I had Cody Kennedy, and then that year I had Ben Thomas for the bowl game. Then I had George Barnett for a little bit. Then I had Chris Watt, and then it was Geep Wade and then it was Eman Naghavi and now coach Roushar. It's good to see the same face in here for two years."

On what he will remember from Tulane career:

"We all get together, the little things we do outside of football. Obviously football brings us all together, but it's better to know the person outside of football and stay together with them. I'm making lifelong friends being here."

On blocking for Makhi Hughes:

"It's easy. He's a great running back. He communicates really well with us like what's he seeing and what he needs us to do, so just having that constant communication and that chemistry with him is really easy."

Update: Wednesday, Oct. 2

Although Ethan Head has done a decent job as Tulane's placekicker since Jacob Barnes got injured at Oklahoma (aside from the extra point under the crossbar on his first attempt), hitting three of four field goals and 12 straight extra points, the Wave would be better off with a healthy Barnes, and that appears to be the case this week. Jon Sumrall said Barnes had performed 60 to 80 percent of his normal workload in practice this week and likely will be ready Saturday against UAB while stopping short of guaranteeing it. Barnes hit 54 of 68 field goals (79.4 percent) at Louisiana Tech and is 3 of 4 for Tulane, with his only miss the 50-yarder in which he got hurt. If he is close to 100 percent, he will be a more reliable option than Head, a true freshman out of Chicago who had no idea he would get a chance to kick field goals this year when he accepted a preferred walk-on offer.

I was dumbfounded Saturday when someone asked Darian Mensah after the USF game if he had become more comfortable throwing on the run as the year went along. It's been his best strength from the beginning, and he won the job by making a couple of incredible throws after scrambling to his left in a preseason scrimmage. He showed that ability again today on the first play of the 2-minute drill that ends Wednesday practices, drifting to his left to avoid pressure and throwing a strike to Bryce Bohanon near the sideline for a hefty gain. Bohanon barely got his feet in before running out of the bounds, and the big play led to a made field goal by Bobby Noel on the last play (the regular kickers do their work on Tuesday and Thursday). Mensah is really accurate on those throws, and it is a big part of his game.

Kam Hamilton moved back inside to defensive tackle for a portion of practice today, with Gerrod Henderson at end. Hamilton looked good in his first stint at end against South Florida, but if the coaches want to get their best combination on the field, a lineup while Adin Huntington is less than 100 percent, a lineup of Henderson, Hamilton, Patrick Jenkins and whoever wins the job at bandit (today it was Terrell Allen, who sat out against USF with a minor injury) makes sense at least some of the time. They have a lot of options up front, but not all of them have panned out through five games.

Sincere Haynesworth attended practice today. He still is hoping to catch on with an NFL team after being cut by the Saints and will do everything in his power to be ready if called by another team.

Sumrall, Head, Sam Howard and Josh Remetich spoke after practice today. I have transcribed the first three tonight.

SUMRALL

On Barnes status:

"I think he's going to be likely available. I'll know for sure tomorrow. He's kicked somewhere between 60 to 80 percent of his swing, but tomorrow was the day we're going to test."

On Head's performance:

"He has a real maturity about him, a confidence about him that's probably not normal. He's a very sure kid, and his kickoffs have gotten better as the year went. He and (Patrick) Durkin were going to split the kickoffs 50-50, but Durkin wasn't available, so Head's taken all of those (with 24 touchbacks in 25 kickoffs). The week that Jacob had the groin issue after the long field goal at Oklahoma, he got thrown into the fire and has done a nice job."

On Mike Storms, a former marine who is working as a coaching consultant for the team now, has a black belt and is a good friend of strength and conditioning coordinator Rusty Whitt (I knew nothing about him):


"Mike does a great job. Mike and Whitt both have military backgrounds. They've known each other forever. The day I got here on Dec. 10 or whatever day it was to meet the team for the first time, one of the first people I saw was Storms. I didn't know Storms at the time. He said, hey, your guy Whitt is one of my good friends. I'm like all right, cool, who the hell is this guy? He does a really good job with the D-line. He does a nice job with the O-line. He does some stuff with our runners, too, our quarterbacks, like how to take a fall. He's just a really thoughtful, detailed guy, has great energy. He's a train guy, he's a smart guy. The hand-to-hand combat stuff obviously correlates to our game. It helps that this game is about striking, it's about violence, it's about leverage, it's about angles, it's about where you're making contact. It's great to have him back. Nobody works for free. They had to go get a little bit of money for contract work to get him back available. I've been fighting to get it done since the summer, and it just took a little time to actually get it. You saw some of that positive effect of him being back around. He just brings great energy. He's just got a good vibe about him."

On his official role:

"He's just a consultant who really kind of works some in the weight room with Whitt, some out here with the guys doing hand-to-hand combat. He's been in the NFL training camps. He goes around. He's got miltiary background as a Marine, but he's got this hand-to-hand combat background that's really interesting. His specialization really brings a lot of value to our players. I enjoy watching him teach. It's fun to watch him just go through a progression of how he's teaching some things and really as much as anything, he's a great resource for our coaches on how to coach some leverage point things. He's awesome to have here. He's done different roles. He's not in a coaching role. He's more of a consultant. He's just able to kind of give another lens on maybe how to use your hands."

On teaching QBs how to fall:

"Yeah, the whiplash thing that quarterbacks get when they get hit a lot of times from their head getting hit from the back of the ground. I had him talk to our quarterbacks today about taking a hit and ducking your chin, so that when you hit you kind of fall to your shoulder or your side and your head's not hitting the ground. That's not a 100 percent. You can't always see the hit coming, but if you can get your chin tucked, usually you're going to absorb that contact better than if your head's up, gets knocked back and then you get thrown to the ground. He's been in combat. His whole career has been about that. There are some good lessons he can teach all of our position groups even though he works primarily with our O-line and D-line coaches on some hand-to-hand stuff."

On using nerf balls with scout-team offense (the center snaps a nerf ball, but the quarterback already has the football in his hand):


"Yeah, I do that on the scout-team offense. I might have started that when I was an assistant coach here or maybe when I was the defensive coordinator at the University of San Diego before I got here. I hate wasting a rep on a bad snap because of the scout-team center, and so we give him a nerf ball, let him throw the thing wherever he wants to, as far back as possible, and the quarterback already has the ball in his hand. That makes the drill go better. We do stuff like that on the kickoff return where the kicker kicks and the returner's already got the ball in hand, not for our kickoff return team but for our kickoff scout team. It's just another way to make practice more efficient. I hate wasting two minutes of a rep because we have a bad snap."
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